Hi,
Anyone on here using Charter Telephone VOIP service? I've currently
got Verizon, but the wife hates it because our phone lines get flaky
all the time, esp when it rains.
So I'm thinking to save money and combine all my stuff onto Charter.
I've already got High Speed internet and regular old cable. Not wild
about Digital Cable since I'm happy with Tivo and I don't want yet
another set top box to have to deal with...
So, any horror stories about Charter Phone VOIP quality and service?
Thanks,
John

Recently I decided to try to get my program Bt Builder into Fedora
(https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1079064). They identified
some issues during review which I've fixed. Initially I didn't do the
"introdution" email to the devel because I was joining to package my
project and eventually maybe some others. I did eventually join the list
and send the email.
However I've also been reading the Fedora Present and Future articles on
the Fedora Magazine site
http://fedoramagazine.org/fedora-present-and-future-a-fedora-next-2014-up...
It's left me wondering if I should bother going with sponsorship into
Fedora. I can setup a COPR and perhaps move into the distribution via the
Playground.
Do you Fedora will continue with the current sponsorship model? Will new
projects instead come in through the personal repositories of COPR?

LOPSA East 2014 starts in one week! All the talks have been scheduled,
all the tutorials and instructors have been book, now all you need to do
is show up, right?
In http://scottberkun.com/essays/24-how-to-get-the-most-out-of-conferences/
Scott Berkun (author of five books, including _The Year Without Pants_)
states: "There is no better way to meet others and access the most
interesting and friendly people than participating." The good news is
that even this late in the game, there's still a way you you to
participate: Lightning Talks!
Lightning Talks are a series of five-minute talks (no slides!) where
enthusiasm is paramount and almost anything that might be of interest to
sysadmins is on-topic. Have an idea for a talk or tutorial for a future
conference you want to try out? Give a Lightning Talk. Want to share a
cool new trick with your peers? Give a Lightning Talk. Have an idea for
a tool and want feedback? Give a Lightning Talk. Want to convince your
peers to change how they do their jobs, or quit their jobs, or not to
make the same mistake you did, or step away from the keyboard and learn
to cook? Give a Lightning Talk.
The Lightning Talks session is Saturday, May 3rd, at 3:30 p.m. There's
room for at least nine talks, more if people use fewer than their
allotted time (five minutes). To sign up for a Lightning Talk, send email
to <lightningtalks(a)lopsaeast.org> or contact the Lightning Talks
coordinator (Adam Moskowitz) at the conference and sign up in person.
Talk slots are on a first-come, first-served basis; there will be a
waiting list, and if there's time at the end of the session you can just
step up to the microphone without signing up in advance (but don't count
on this as all the slots are usually taken).
Remember: Five minutes (hard limit), no slides, pretty much any topic.
Yes, even cooking -- if you can find a way to tie it to system
administration. There's no easier way to actively participate in the
conference than to give a Lightning Talk!
Best regards,
Evan & the rest of the LOPSA-East Committee

This message has two parts. The first is about the basic mail program. The
second (which
is more important to me) is about how to avoid having to use the mail
program.
Part I: The Basic mail program
(I'm running CentOS.)
I asked last night about the basic mail program - specifically about
navigating through the
headers. Chuck looked up some documentation and said that the "h+" and "h-"
commands
should do it. And, somebody came up to me with his laptop and showed the
"z" command.)
Here's what the help file within mail shows about the "z" command:
(Yes. -It says nothing about the z command.)
Here's what I found with the h+ and h- commands:
When I invoke mail, it displays the headers of 38 unread messages (numbers 1
- 38)
and a prompt ("&"). (The terminal window is 132 characters wide by 42 lines
long.)
If I type h+, it displays the same 38 headers again. (h- gets "Referencing
before 1")
If I type h7865782365, I get "Invalid message number". If I type h 1-a, I
get "Non-numeric
second argument". If I type h 1-4, I get the first 38 headers. The program
seems to
be parsing what follows an "h", but royally screws up acting on what it
finds.
If I type "39", I get message 39. (There doesn't seem to be a "LAST"
command to
see the last message - and find out its number. So, typing, say, 100, gets
an error
because there's no such message.) Anyway, after viewing message 39, if I
THEN type h,
it shows headers for messages 39 - 51. (h+ shows the same headers, 39 -
51.)
But, h- now shows the first 38. (That makes sense.) But, after using h- to
get back
to the 1 - 38 list, h+ shows the first 38 messages again.
After displaying the first 38 headers, the "z" command DOES cause the next
set of headers
to be displayed (39 - 51).
I figured that, until I figure out how to set things up to forward the
logwatch mail to a
gmail account, I could tolerate using a separate, basic mail program to
check the logs.
But, this is crap. People were asking about the guy who screwed up the
OpenSSL
heartbeat code. What about the guy who wrote this piece of crap? It's very
basic stuff
that doesn't work. Not too difficult to test...
Part II: Getting EMail Forwarded from the Linux System as a Client
I have two interests here. One is just academic. -Understanding how to use
the mail program,
despite (or because of) its suckiness.
The other is so I can see the messages that the log scrapers send via
/bin/mail to the root
account's email. Ideally, I would set things up to have all of root's email
get forwarded to,
say, a gmail account.
But, my setup seems to place some limits on what I can do.
I set up an MTA on my VMS box long ago. I used to be able to send email
directly from
that system. But, it stopped working at some point, and I found that
Verizon reports all of the
DHCP addresses that they allocate to residential DSL customers as spam
sources, so
everything was getting blocked.
I have written programs (in PHP) that use a PEAR class/API to send email
from the
Linux box, via a gmail account, to arbitrary addressees. [It requires such
information
as host (smtp.gmail.com), port (587), username & password for the gmail
account...]
So, I'm not sure if an MTA is what I really need. Can at MTA be set up to
send email as
a client of sorts to a real MTA (e.g., google mail)? Or do I need some
other type of
utility?
Sure, I can write my own, but I would hope that somebody else has already
done it.
(Well, as long as it's not the person who wrote "mail".)

Our client in Chelmsford, MA has 2-3 contract openings for Sr Software Engineers with a strong background with C++ and low level Linux kernel and drivers experience.
These are 6 month contracts.
Must be able to interview and work on site as well as pass background check and drug test.
Consultants will be responsible for Linux driver and kernel development and board bring up.
Any experience with VxWorks is a plus
Please feel free to forward this email to your friends and associates
If interested, please send a copy of your resume to jspencer (at) connectedsp.com
Your resume will not be sent anywhere without your prior approval.
Regards,
John Spencer
Connected Systems Partners
Connecting Top Talent with Top Companies
Office: 978-455-5550 x208
Cell: 978-621-9743
jspencer(a)connectedsp.com
www.connectedsp.com
GET CONNECTED!
Unless otherwise explicitly instructed by sender, all information in this email is considered confidential and intended for the view and use of the recipient(s) only.

WLUG folk,
You guys crunch heavy issues, and I have a cream puff of an issue I just
can't crack, and I am not too ashamed to admit it.
There is a site with a series of m4v (Quicktime) files I want to be able to
at least stream, if not download, but I have two problems.
The first is that the site www.worcestercatholictv.com has set the
permissions on the files so that they will only play embedded in their
webpage, AND they have the files as invisible unless the embedded web page
searches for them, and as a result, standalone items like VLC can't touch
it, and I can't download it.
The second is that the issue seems to be related to my running Ubuntu
12.0.4 LTS, and a buddy is having no issues reportedly in 13.X
It makes no difference if it is Chromium of Firefox that tries to playback.
Default User Agent Switcher has been installed to see if that was
generating a conflict, but that doesn't seem to be it either.
Totem 3.0.1
Gecko-mediaplayer 1.0.4
I have searched for similar issues and don't seem to come up with anything.
I have scanned help files and that doesn't seem to address this either.
At this point, if I had a guess, it is the result of funny permissions on a
file that no one is worried about being Linux compatible.
Thoughts are most welcome,
Colin

Hello once again folks,
LOPSA-East is proud to announce this year's keynote speakers!
Friday evening Keynote: Vish Ishaya, CTO of Nebula Inc.
Title: OpenStack in the Datacenter
For better or worse, cloud is arriving in the datacenter. The massive growth of OpenStack is paving the way for an onslaught of private clouds. Cloud will be the second datacenter revolution this century. Virtualization changed the way that machines are provisioned and managed, and cloud promises an even more radical set of changes.
Come hear Vish discuss the history of OpenStack, cloud versus virtualization, and get guidance for dealing with the specific challenges that cloud creates for system administrators!
Bio: Vish Ishaya is Chief Technology Officer of Nebula, Inc. He is a highly prolific developer who was one of the founding engineers of OpenStack. He was elected to the first OpenStack Technical Committee, where he has served consistently since. He was also elected to four consecutive terms as the OpenStack Compute Project Technical Lead and is currently on the board of OpenStack Foundation. In addition to his programming and systems skills, Vish has spent over a decade teaching, most recently classes in object oriented analysis and design.
Saturday closing Keynote: Elizabeth Krumbach Joseph
Title: Universal Design for Tech: Improving Gender Diversity in our Industry
Universal Design is a principle in accessibility thataccessible design makes things better for everyone. A key example of which are curb cuts and door openers which help those who are disabled but also folks with luggage and parents with strollers.
Elizabeth will discuss ideas on how to improve gender diversity in our industry, but many of the tips will help everyone beyond improvements that come through diversity. From offering formal education for systems administration to offering flexible schedules and work arrangements, there are many things that can be done to attract much-needed talent.
Bio: Elizabeth Krumbach Joseph is an Automation and Tools Engineer at HP working on the OpenStack Infrastructure team. She has been involved with open source communities for over a decade and turned that passion into a profession when she began working as a professional systems administrator in 2006. In addition to her work on OpenStack, she is a member of the Ubuntu Community Council and is a co-author of the upcoming 8th edition of The Official Ubuntu Book. At home, she serves on Board of Directors for Partimus.org, a non-profit in the San Francisco Bay Area providing Linux-based computers to schools in need.
LOPSA-East is a regional sysadmin conference in New Brunswick NJ, May 2-3, 2014. Two days of world-class training on a diverse range of topics plus community-selected talks: http://lopsa-east.org/2014/schedule
Best,
Evan & the rest of the LOPSA-East 2014 Committee
http://lopsa-east.org/2014 Register today!